GCC Faces Rising Security Fatigue as Strong Protocols Lead to Increased Breaches

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GCC Faces Rising Security Fatigue as Strong Protocols Lead to Increased Breaches

Enterprise security leaders in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are confronting an unforeseen adversary: security fatigue. This phenomenon arises not from cybercriminals or outdated systems, but from the overwhelming burden of excessive security checks that employees face daily.

Each login, token, and multi-factor authentication (MFA) request is designed to enhance safety. However, in many GCC organizations, these measures have inadvertently led to users circumventing policies, automating logins, or sharing credentials merely to navigate their daily tasks. The result is increased friction, diminished focus, and ironically, a rise in security breaches.

The Rise of Security Fatigue

Security fatigue is a psychological condition where users become desensitized to alerts and authentication requests. In industries such as banking, energy, and healthcare, where employees manage multiple platforms, this fatigue is not merely theoretical; it is quantifiable.

According to the IBM Security X-Force threat intelligence Index 2024, approximately one-third of all cyber incidents originate from stolen or compromised credentials—not due to weak systems, but because individuals are overwhelmed. When every task demands a new code or device approval, users begin to cut corners. In high-stakes sectors like finance, where time is critical, professionals often resort to risky shortcuts, such as reusing credentials or maintaining active sessions indefinitely.

GCC’s Paradox: Strong Rules, Weak Experience

The GCC markets are governed by some of the strictest security and data regulations worldwide. Frameworks such as the NCA ECC in Saudi Arabia, the UAE PDPL, and CBUAE Information Security Regulations mandate robust authentication protocols. While these measures are necessary, few organizations have successfully balanced compliance with user experience.

This imbalance results in employees needing to authenticate five to eight times daily across disparate systems. Remote vendors utilize VPNs, contractors manage temporary accounts, and IT teams frequently reset forgotten tokens. While security measures appear strong on paper, they are operationally fragile.

When MFA Becomes a Barrier, Not a Defense

Multi-factor authentication remains a critical component of cybersecurity; however, it is not a panacea. When implemented without a coherent strategy, MFA can hinder workflows and erode trust in security teams.

For instance, a regional bank that mandated MFA for every application, including internal dashboards, saw a 40% increase in service desk tickets related to login issues within three months. Concurrently, the use of shadow IT—unsanctioned tools—doubled. The intention was to enhance protection, but the outcome was fragmentation.

The challenge lies not in the tool itself but in the absence of intelligent orchestration. Authentication processes should adapt to context—considering factors such as device, location, and user behavior—rather than applying uniform friction to every action.

The Human Factor of Identity

In corporate discussions, the term “identity” often appears as a technical concept relegated to IT departments. However, it is fundamentally human. Each authentication step represents an interaction between an individual and a system of trust. When this relationship becomes frustrating, users tend to disengage.

Dmitry Kachurin, an Identity and Access Management Expert at UDV Technologies, emphasizes that “access management, when implemented correctly, saves money. It reduces support load, minimizes license waste, and lowers audit and incident costs. In cybersecurity, this is one area where ROI is indisputable.”

Progressive organizations in the region are beginning to rethink their approach. They are adopting risk-based access and adaptive authentication, where trust is established continuously rather than repetitively. If a user’s behavior aligns with established patterns, the system remains unobtrusive. If not, it responds intelligently.

This equilibrium between security and user empathy is emerging as a competitive differentiator, particularly in customer-facing sectors such as digital banking and government services.

From Fatigue to Trust

The trajectory of cybersecurity in the GCC will not be determined by the number of protective layers a company implements but by the seamless and intelligent nature of its identity strategy. As large-scale transformation initiatives unfold under Vision 2030 and Smart Government programs, success will favor those who recognize that trust is not cultivated through excessive checks but through making essential checks virtually invisible.

Security fatigue is not merely a user issue; it is fundamentally a design challenge. Addressing it begins with one critical question: Are we protecting people, or are we exhausting them?

www.udvtech.com

Source: securitymiddleeastmag.com

Keep reading for the latest cybersecurity developments, threat intelligence and breaking updates from across the Middle East.

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